Special January
20th Reprint
The Campus Anti-War Movement
A View
from an Insider
By RICHARD MORENO
When I recently took part
in conversations with student anti-war activists from campuses across the nation, I heard them say over and over again, to
my disillusionment, how the anti-war movement had fizzled out after the initial invasion of Iraq--and even more so during
the presidential election. I thought to myself. . .this cannot possibly be true! I assume my own vantage point in the campus anti-war movement in the Los Angeles area
had made me oblivious to the state of campuses all over the nation.
But let us put things
in perspective.
Clearly it can be said
that the objective conditions could hardly be more in need of a genuine and vivacious campus anti-war movement. At the time of this writing, news of the death toll in Iraq ranges in the tens of thousands, over
100 thousand according to one recent estimate, and with more news of fresh killings in the lands of ancient
Mesopotamia being broadcast around the planet every day. While
the U.S. government has spent some 150 billion on the failed Iraqi war effort (compare this to the measly 35 million being donated to the Tsunami
victims), the middle classes, who have no stake in this illegal war (any war fought for non-defensive reasons is illegal
according to the most elementary international laws), continue
their irrepressible downward spiral.
The Irish poet W. B. Yeats,
whom I disagree with on many things, once got something right when he wrote:
“Education is not
the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.”
Is there not a better
time than now to be a college activist? Indeed, my college’s anti-war network,
which I am a humble member, has been even more active than when it first started just days before the invasion of Iraq (number
II).
Indeed, one of our most
successful actions occurred merely a day before the presidential election itself. We had the Associated Students pay Lions
Gate Films a small fee so we could show Michael Moore’s inflammatory Fahrenheit 9/11 documentary in our main lecture
hall. But we did not use this screening to endorse this or that presidential
candidate (as Moore himself has). On the contrary, we told the overcrowded and
somewhat shocked auditorium that regardless of who wins the election the next day, our struggle to oppose the outrageous
occupation would not stop for one single second (--though, of course, our strategy and tactics may change). In synthesis, we were successful because we were creative in our anti-war activism; we were firm in our
principles, but flexible in their application.
In our pre-election campus
anti-war work, we made it a point to hammer the idea that we oppose the occupation, regardless of whoever is in Washington. Our goal was to prepare people for whatever was going to come. This tactic has been demonstrably effective, as in the case of the F 9/11 action. We have also made it part and parcel of our work to point out the illegal nature of the war and the occupation,
both of which cannot logically (or legally) be considered separable. Thus, we
never became susceptible to the post-invasion confusion, which apparently has contributed to the corrosion of so many anti-war
organizations and networks, from what my friends have been saying.
We need to stand
back and look at the big picture. According
to a recent poll published in the LA Times Dec. 28th issue, most people in the U.S. do not believe the Iraq war was worth
fighting. The duty of campus
anti-war activists is to direct this into a coherent movement. So, if campus
activism is dying in some localities, then fundamentally it is not because of the supposed apathy or narrow-mindedness of
the students, but rather, if I may be so bold, it is the lack of leadership on our part.
With faith in our younger
generation’s desire for a better world and a firm grasp of the objective and subjective conditions, we can do anything.
In this vein, our campus
initiated the call for mass campus walkouts on January 20th, the day of W Bush’s inauguration. We call on all students to walkout as an act of defiance and in solidarity with the people suffering from
the policies of this administration.
In our Walkout
Statement, we quote Martin Luther King, Jr. in this manner:
“We are now faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now.
In this unfolding conundrum of life and history, there "is" such a thing as being too late. This is no time for apathy or
complacency. This is the time for vigorous and positive action.”
In this spirit, we as students have chosen to take action on the 20th. The
time for confusion and disillusionment on campuses after the election and occupation is over; now is the time for action!
Richard Moreno is a student at Mt. San Antonio College in the Los Angeles area. He is also a cofounder of the Global
Resistance Network. And he can be reached
at polyapplications@aol.com.
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